Boogie Nights Today

Boogie Nights is a glittering, sweaty, and surprisingly tender tragedy wrapped in a fake smile. It’s one of the best films of the 1990s—and a near-flawless portrait of American dreamers who flew too close to the sun, only to crash into a shag-carpeted floor.

A movie that makes you laugh, cringe, and ache—sometimes in the same scene. Boogie Nights

Here’s a helpful review of Boogie Nights (1997), focusing on its themes, performances, and direction: A Dazzling, Tragicomic Masterpiece of Excess and Its Aftermath Boogie Nights is a glittering, sweaty, and surprisingly

★★★★½

Paul Thomas Anderson’s Boogie Nights isn’t really about the Golden Age of porn—it’s about the intoxicating lure of finding a family, then watching that family implode under the weight of drugs, ego, and changing times. The film works brilliantly as both a thrilling ensemble drama and a cautionary tale about the 1970s turning into the 1980s. Here’s a helpful review of Boogie Nights (1997),